Just the one by-election took place on Thursday, with another having been held on Wednesday. Reform were defending Thursday's vacancy, the third week in a row they have been on the defence. However, this time it is not a resignation - the incumbent tragically died from a brain tumour at the age of just 46. The late Cllr Kevin Towill defected from the Conservatives prior to last year's local elections and gained the seat at the expense of his old party, who were pushed into third.
We expected a Reform hold here, but there was a surprisingly strong challenge from the Greens who came from nowhere to claim second place with almost a quarter of the vote. Labour should be as deeply concerned about the rise of the Greens to their left as they are about Reform to their right. With both insurgent parties set to pincer Labour in May, there is every likelihood that the Greens will win more council seats than Labour and - more worryingly for Labour - there is an outside chance Polanski's crazy gang could push Labour into fourth in both the Senedd and the Scottish Parliament.
We are currently witnessing the final weeks of Starmer's premiership, with a resignation likely in May. If the scale of the electoral disaster is such, he will resign the morning after. If he opts to cling on a wee bit longer, he will be forced out by cabinet resignations and a total collapse in PLP support. Labour MPs and potential successors are now merely counting down the days.
Newquay Porth & Tretherras, Cornwall Council
Ref: 645 (30.2%) -7.7%
Grn: 529 (24.8%) New
Ind: 361 (16.9%) New
LDm: 349 (16.3%) -9.9%
Con: 132 (6.2%) -14.6%
Lab: 120 (5.6%) -9.6%
Ref HOLD
Wednesday's by-election was also triggered by the death of an incumbent, the 81-year-old Labour councillor having passed away due to old age. This was an exceptionally strong Labour ward, with the party having won here in 2024 by more than 1,200 votes. Despite this, we predicted a Green gain, but defeat to anyone here would have been indicative of the massive scale of Labour's looming electoral disaster in May. Labour have controlled Salford since its inception as a metropolitan borough in 1974.
As it turned out, this previously solid left-wing ward opted for Reform with a huge swing from Labour. We predicted that Labour would haemorrhage votes to both the Greens and Reform, but the swing was almost exclusively towards Reform. The Greens slumped from second to third and ended up with less votes than they received in 2024, while a hard left independent endorsed by Your Party finished last. The Greens only increased their vote share courtesy of Labour's almost 30 point dip against a low turnout.
This was a devastating result for Labour, but another first for Reform as they added their first Salford council seat.
Barton & Winton, Salford City Council
Ref: 676 (34.9%) New
Lab: 643 (33.2%) -29.1%
Grn: 363 (18.7%) +4.0%
Con: 118 (6.1%) -8.2%
LDm: 94 (4.9%) -3.8%
Ind: 44 (2.3%) New
Ref GAIN from Lab
There is now just one more council by-election before the May elections.






















































